BMC Cancer (Nov 2024)

Palliative care of proximal femur metastatic disease and osteolytic lesions: results following surgical and radiation treatment

  • Elisabeth Mehnert,
  • Fränze Sophie Möller,
  • Christine Hofbauer,
  • Anne Weidlich,
  • Doreen Winkler,
  • Esther G. C. Troost,
  • Christina Jentsch,
  • Konrad Kamin,
  • Marcel Mäder,
  • Klaus-Dieter Schaser,
  • Hagen Fritzsche

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-13170-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Femoral bone metastases (FBM) or lesions (FBL) can lead to loss of mobility and independence due to skeletal-related events (SRE), e.g. pain, deformity and pathological fractures. Aim of this study was to analyze effects of radiotherapy and surgery, different surgical techniques and complications on disease-specific survival (DSS). Methods Patients who underwent palliative therapy for FBM or FBL between 2014 and 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. Chi-square test was used to detect intergroup differences. Survival was calculated using Kaplan-Meier method, Cox regression and compared using log-rank test. Complications were evaluated using Chi-Square test. Results 145 patients were treated for proximal femoral BM/BL or pathologic fractures (10 bilaterally). Three groups were classified: surgery only (S, n = 53), surgery with adjuvant radiation (S + RT, n = 58), and primary radiation only (RT, n = 44). Most common primary tumors were breast (n = 31), prostate (n = 27), and non-small cell lung cancer (n = 27). 47 patients underwent surgery for an impending, 61 for a manifest pathological fracture. There were no significant differences in DSS between the 3 groups (S = 29.8, S + RT = 32.2, RT = 27.1 months), with the S + RT group having the longest one-year survival. Local complications occurred in 25 of 145 patients after a mean interval of 9.9 months. Conclusion Due to the steadily increasing incidence and survival of patients with FBM/FBL, indication for prevention and treatment of painful and immobilizing SREs should be critically assessed. Surgical treatment should always be performed with maximum stability and, whenever possible, adjuvant RT.

Keywords